clean food + wellness + bliss

Farro Dolma Salad with Baba Ganoush

I recently returned home from a month-long journey that took me from Houston, TX to the suburbs of Detroit, MI. What I am willing to do for yoga…drive 20 hours, share a hotel room with other people for more than three weeks, wake up at the crack of dawn…and love (almost) every minute of it.

I had the privilege of studying what I love with 39 other people who love yoga as much I do. And when you get that many people together focused on a common purpose, great things happen. We laughed, we cried, we sweat (a lot), we danced, we sang and we bonded in an amazing way. I’m so happy to say that I have brothers and sisters all around the country that I shared this life-changing experience with.

Another thing we did was eat some pretty delicious mediterranean food. Who knew? Detroit is home to some incredible food. Maybe food tastes better after you’ve done a ton of yoga (or meditated for 8 hours or sat in a sweat lodge), but all I know is that I loved it. We had, among other things: dolmas; lentils and rice; cucumber tomato salads, hummus and baba ganoush. Of course, I was inspired to make some of this at home.

First I started reading recipes for dolmas (stuffed grape leaves) and um, they looked a little more complicated than what I had time to do. So I took a little shortcut (hack if you will) and decided to throw a bunch of dolma ingredients into a salad. I chose farro for the grain, but you could use rice instead, especially if you want to make it gluten free.

Ingredients for Farro Dolma Salad

This worked out so great. It was the taste of dolmas without all of the work of having to roll the grape leaves. I just chopped the grape leaves and threw them in with the other ingredients. Super yummy.

Farro Dolma Salad

Then I whipped up some baba ganoush which is similar to hummus but made with eggplant. It has this compelling smoky flavor and smooth consistency. I love it so much! I started by charring the eggplant on my gas stovetop.

Charred eggplant

It takes about 5 minutes to char all of the skin. You could probably do this longer if you like, but my house was starting to smell of smoke so I bailed. Then I roasted the charred eggplant for about 20 minutes in the oven to further soften the inside flesh. Next I blended the eggplant with tahini, garlic, lemon juice and olive oil in the food processor. I added a little smoked sea salt and a tiny amount of liquid smoke because I really wanted that super smoky flavor.

Baba Ganoush

Farro Dolma Salad with Baba Ganoush

I served the salad with a scoop of baba ganoush and a lemon slice. It was just about the perfect meal after an evening of teaching yoga. And as a bonus it made me think of my time in Michigan and the wonderful connections that I made there. Sending much love to my fellow Yoga Teacher Training friends near and far. May all beings be happy and free.

In a small jar, add olive oil, lemon juice, greek seasoning and agave to taste. Shake to combine and add salt and pepper to taste.

Add dressing to farro mixture. Toss to coat evenly. Season with salt and pepper to your taste.

Serve with scoop of baba ganoush and a wedge of lemon.

Baba Ganoush

Serves 2-4

1 medium eggplant

2 Tbsp tahini

Juice of 1/2 lemon

2 Tbsp olive oil

1 large clove of garlic

Sea salt

Liquid smoke

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Char outer skin of eggplant over open flame on a gas stove for about 5 minutes. Transfer eggplant to a baking sheet and roast 20 minutes or until tender.

Peel and discard skin from flesh of eggplant and place eggplant into the bowl of a food processor. Add tahini, lemon juice and garlic. Process until beginning to combine. Add olive oil through tube and combine until very smooth. Add sea salt and about 6 drops of liquid smoke to taste if desired.

About lstrachtman

As a culinary school grad and yoga enthusiast, I am very seriously into eating good healthy food and sharing creative, easy ways to prepare it. When I'm not cooking, I love teaching yoga, talking about yoga, reading about yoga and doing yoga. And I believe the more you live it, the more you find yourself wanting, even craving, clean wholesome food.

Laura Trachtman

As a culinary school grad and yoga enthusiast, I am very seriously into eating good healthy food and sharing creative, easy ways to prepare it. When I'm not cooking, I love teaching yoga, talking about yoga, reading about yoga and doing yoga. And I believe the more you live it, the more you find yourself wanting, even craving, clean wholesome food.